Initial Exchange Offerings (IEOs)

The crowdfunding models have seen fair a share of innovation since online payment applications became easily accessible. Bitcoin enabled sending money across the world cheaper & faster; opening new frontiers for innovators to kick-start their business in exchange for token rewards. This particular way of raising capital in cryptocurrency ecosystem is popularly known as Initial Coin Offering or ICO.

ICOs enable projects to raise money from the investors, which usually expect the appreciation in price of the tokens they get in lieu of their investment. The investment decision is based on a project’s business idea, which is usually expressed in a Whitepaper. Cryptocurrency investors often look at the following factors before putting their money into a project -

As a matter of fact, for an investor to make an informed decision about an ICO project - all the project had to do was create a good online reputation. During the year 2017, around 717 projects completed their ICO with 69 projects reaching the Soft Cap and 48 making the Hard Cap whereas in 2018, 138 projects reached hard cap while 438 projects made it to Soft Cap out of a total of 2284 projects according to cointelegraph. This is suffice to say the ICO Market is not dead, yet.[1]

It is natural for an ICO project to try to list their token on an exchange soon after an ICO concludes. ICOBox - an ICO platform charges 40 bitcoin (BTC) for a basic package that provides a platform for crowdfunding, legal and marketing support. IDAX charges around 20 BTC per listing with additional marketing charges. The fee may depend on the project, the exchange and the market conditions.

With the recent crackdown of regulatory agencies on ICO projects mentioned in my previous article and the scams that have resulted due to uninformed decisions taken by the investors, new financing models have emerged; one of which is known as Initial Exchange Offering or IEO. An IEO is essentially an ICO as a platform offered by an exchange; where a token issuer (ICO project) raises capital from the public by offering the token sale directly on an exchange instead of doing the same through their website.

Here is my recent interview on the subject, note that my research about IEO was still ongoing when I did the interview and so I decided to write this article to provide more details with a few minor corrections.

According to CoinMarketCap: Binance, one of the biggest cryptocurrency exchange (by trading volume) saw an overall decrease from a monthly US $3.5 billion in March 2018 to US $1.5 billion - 0.6 billion in February 2019 (in trading volume) and this trend is synonymous with most exchanges. So it makes sense for the exchanges to offer their exchange as a platform for ICO to quick-start liquidity, therefore paving way for a healthier market.

In Conclusion

Of course the token issuers (ICO Projects) will have to bear heavy cost for getting themselves endorsed by an exchange which, in turn, have to put their reputation on line for the project. For the investors, it is easier to invest when an exchange is endorsing a project. Although, they have to go through the KYC process of every IEO they want to be a part of and that can be a deciding factor for many investors. An exchange platform is far more secure than a ICO project’s website and security is something an ICO project must consider before going for crowdfunding.

IEO brings a new fundraising option, building over the ICOs. Are regulations going to make it harder for projects to raise funds through IEO, will be interesting to watch. Supporting exchanges will need strategic build-up of teams that can examine a potential ICO which has a potential to push their trading volume high and therefore, revenue.